President Donald Trump said Sunday he will move to close Washington’s Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts for two years starting in July for construction.
Politics and Government
Department officials said over the summer that a review of Epstein-related records did not establish a basis for new criminal investigations.
Images of the young boy wearing a bunny hat and Spider-Man backpack and surrounded by immigration officers drew outrage about the Trump administration’s crackdown in Minneapolis.
The strike came days after U.S. President Donald Trump said the Kremlin had agreed to temporarily halt the targeting of the Ukrainian capital and other cities.
Israel’s announcement came a day after Israeli strikes killed at least 30 Palestinians including several children, according to hospital officials.
Nevada would join more than two dozen states that have adopted legislation protecting a person’s digital assets should they die or become incapacitated.
Sixteen bills and resolutions ended up on the legislative scrap heap after failing to get beyond a Tuesday deadline.
A bill that would bar mental health professionals from conducting sexual orientation or gender identity conversion therapy on minors moved one step closer to becoming law Wednesday.
The film industry is on the verge of losing its exemption from obtaining a Nevada business license, a perk no one remembers how they got in the first place.
President Donald Trump signed an executive order Wednesday to identify national monuments that can be rescinded or resized – part of a broader push to open up more federal lands to drilling, mining and other development.
A congressional battle was renewed Wednesday when a House panel held its first hearing this year on reviving the mothballed Yucca Mountain nuclear repository in Nevada.
You’d think Twitter would be able to milk its status as President Donald Trump’s megaphone. But the company still faces stagnant user growth, has never made a profit and may even report a quarterly revenue decline Wednesday, a first since going public.
3 things to watch for on Legislative Session Day 80: constructions costs, barber board and surrendering newborns.
Lawmakers addressed criminal justice reforms as they raced to pass bills Tuesday. Bills that survived would affect offenders entering the system and those trying to re-enter society after prison.
Fur trappers would have to identify their traps and pay higher fees under a bill approved Tuesday by the Nevada Senate.
